Before joining the Cornell faculty in 2008, Dorf was a professor at Columbia University School of Law and, before that, at Rutgers University School of Law in Camden, New Jersey. He graduated from Harvard College and Harvard Law School. While at Harvard as an undergraduate, he was the American Parliamentary Debate Association national champion. Before attending law school, he co-authored three peer-reviewed articles in physics arising out of a fellowship in the physics department of Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. Dorf has advised organizations involved in constitutional litigation, and he has written numerous amicus briefs filed with the United States Supreme Court.
A Tale of Two Formalisms: How Law-and-Economics Mirrors Originalism and Textualism, 106 Cornell Law Review 591 (co-author Neil H. Buchanan, 2021).
How to Choose the Least Unconstitutional Option: Lessons for the President (and Others) from the Debt Ceiling Standoff, 112 Columbia Law Review 1175 (co-author Neil H. Buchanan, 2012).
The Supreme Court 1997 Term—Foreword: The Limits of Socratic Deliberation, 112 Harvard Law Review 4 (1998).
A Constitution of Democratic Experimentalism, 98 Columbia Law Review 267 (1998) (co-author Charles F. Sabel).
Incidental Burdens on Fundamental Rights, 109 Harvard Law Review 1175 (1996).
Facial Challenges to State and Federal Statutes, 46 Stanford Law Review 236 (1994).